messengers of the gods and spirits
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh é NCH ā IGU ǐ sh ǐ, which means that it seems that there are ghosts and gods at the command of the same, unconsciously do the original did not expect to do. From the peach blossom.
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's "peach blossom" the fourth fold: "this scene is quietly promoted, like a ghost."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; used as predicate, attribute and adverbial; used for admonishment, blame and criticism. The ninth chapter of Zui Xing Shi: the king is always four poor and vicious, and the law of heaven must be removed, so the gods send ghosts to do such things. Chapter 8 of the history of civilization: "then I have not been taken this time, so that I can escape the net, or I am secretly sent by gods and ghosts, so that I can try to rescue them, and it is not certain." Chapter 23 of Li Baojia's Officialdom: when I put incense in front of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas in the evening, I will tell them all about you. At that time, the gods will tell you to say, not afraid you won't say!
Chinese PinYin : shén chāi guǐ shǐ
messengers of the gods and spirits
Scorched skin and chapped feet. zhì fū jūn zú
Nine lines and eight industries. jiǔ háng bā yè
a myriad of stars surround the moon. zhòng xīng pěng yuè
firm and unyielding character. zhēng zhēng tiě gǔ